Cooper sales, earnings drop in Q4, fiscal year

FINDLAY, Ohio — Cooper Tire & Rubber Co. suffered double-digit drops in operating income for the quarter and year ended Dec. 31 as the company dealt with elevated costs related to raw materials and manufacturing and reduced unit sales and revenue.

Net income fell 61.6 percent to $95.4 million, as the company recorded $68 million of "discrete" tax items in the fourth quarter related to the impact of U.S. tax reforms.

Despite the earnings drops, Cooper President and CEO Brad Hughes said Cooper management was "pleased" to have ended 2017 with an operating margin of 9.5 percent, which he said was "near the high end" of the 8- to 10-percent guidance range the company issued in the fourth quarter.

"This is noteworthy," he said, "given the pricing and volume challenges within the industry throughout the year, and the significant impact of higher raw material costs."

For 2018 Cooper expects unit volume growth over 2017 and an operating ratio in the 9- to 11-percent range, based on revenue-growth initiatives, the reclassification of certain pension costs and "underlying macro-conditions that favor tire industry growth," Mr. Hughes said.

Bradley Hughes

The company didn't disclose a specific revenue forecast.

In the fourth quarter, operating income plunged 55.5 percent to $46.8 million on 3.4-percent lower sales of $757 million. Unit sales were off 1.9 percent, reflecting a drop of 6.2 percent in the Americas, which was partially offset by a 15-percent unit volume growth in the International segment.

The firm reported a net loss of $42.2 million due in large part to the tax-related charges.

Cooper's Americas segment reported 7.1-percent lower revenue in both the quarter and fiscal year — to $645 million and 2.42 billion, respectively — as unit shipments were off 6.2 percent overall, including an 8.3-percent drop in car/light truck tire sales in the U.S.

Cooper cited "industrywide conditions and our continued exit from some non-strategic private brand business" for its shipments decline.

By contrast, industrywide shipments for the same period were up 1.6 percent.

Operating income for the year fell 26 percent to $325 million.

Among the initiatives Mr. Hughes said Cooper is undertaking to reverse the negatives of 2017 in the U.S. is to expand efforts to gain OE business outside of Asia, enter new channels and accelerate the cadence of product introductions.

On the cost side, Cooper is working to balance supply and demand more effectively, increase plant automation and streamline its corporate structure. The latter has trimmed about 5 percent of Cooper's salaried positions, the company said.

A bright spot for the company was in its Asian operations, which generated a unit volume increase that nearly offset the U.S. decline. In addition, Cooper singled out its management in Asia team for the rapid integration and production ramp of the GRT truck/bus tire joint venture in China, which generated earnings a year ahead of schedule.

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